Job Posting: Paintings Conservator – Oakland Museum of California (Oakland, CA)

Paintings Conservator

Oakland Museum of California

The Oakland Museum of California (OMCA) is currently seeking an experienced Paintings Conservator, 4 or 5 days/week (benefits included), in the Collections and Information Access Center.
OMCA has a large collection of paintings spanning from pre-Gold Rush California to the present. The collection includes more than 5000 works representing the Bay Area Figurative movement, Society of Six, Abstract Expressionism, 19th Century Landscape, Modern and Contemporary painting, and more. This collection is one of the museum’s most active with works rotating in the permanent gallery, exhibition spaces and both domestic and international outgoing loans.
The Paintings Conservator is responsible for a wide range of treatments, as well as advising on proper conditions for storage, exhibition, and loan. Incumbent performs skilled conservation work including research, examination, treatment, and preventive care, plus grant collaboration, IPM, environmental monitoring, and community engagement. Additionally, the successful candidate will be responsible for providing training and supervision for specialists, preparators, and interns/volunteers. Candidate must have a valid passport that allows courier travel in and out of the US. Reports to the Senior Conservator.
This position is open until filled.
Additional information regarding this position may be found at www.museumca.org/employment-internships.
Posted on behalf of:
Curtissa Clay
HR Coordinator
Oakland Museum of California
1000 Oak Street
Oakland, CA 94607 US

Job Posting: Research Scientist – The Metropolitan Museum of Art (NY,NY)

RESEARCH SCIENTIST

Environmental

 The Metropolitan Museum of Art

 
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, one of the world’s finest museums, seeks a Research Scientist to manage all aspects of the museum environment and preventive conservation research in the Department of Scientific Research and provide support to other museum departments as needed. The position reports to the Scientist in Charge but works closely with the Deputy Director for Collections and Administration. Works in close collaboration with Curatorial, Conservation, Libraries, Facilities and Construction, Health and Safety, Security, Photo Studio, and other departments on a comprehensive and unified museum environment and preventive conservation procedures and policies for the long-term preservation of the museum’s collections.  The position coordinates museum-wide environmental surveys, performs monitoring and analytical duties, provides technical assistance to promote best practice throughout the museum, and reports back to the director’s office and conservation departments, to harness their specific expertise as appropriate on air quality, climate, lighting, insect control, and other issues.  The position acts as the primary liaison between Facilities and Construction, and Exhibitions on one side, and Conservation departments on the other for all matters related to collections care.
 
Primary Responsibilities and Duties:

  • Supervises other staff dedicated to museum environment and preventive conservation in the Department of Scientific Research
  • Conducts museum wide condition surveys and sets standards for preservation management
  • Advises and coordinates collections storage planning including but not limited to materials management and advisement (for instance, cold storage for photographs, plastic objects, contemporary prints)
  • Sets documentation standards and reporting on mounts and installations, and exhibition materials to ensure that transport, storage and display environments are not compromised by the presence/production of harmful compounds within construction materials and/or case materials
  • Monitors the museum environment to ensure agreed climatic conditions are maintained for the collections – including, recommending and managing museum wide climate monitoring system accessible to curators and conservators, overseeing annual surveys, maintaining records of environmental conditions and providing reports.
  • Assist with/undertake routine monitoring and testing/measurement of other environmental factors including light, vibration, dust, and pollutant gas levels.
  • Coordinates the integrated pest management (IPM) strategy across all parts of the Museum, either directly or through staff supervised
  • Attend all relevant construction and exhibition meetings and act as a liaison between facilities and construction and conservation departments
  • Other related duties

 
Requirements and Qualifications
Experience and Skills:

  • Minimum of ten years’ experience in scientific research and research management, in academic, industrial or museum settings, with at least five years in conservation science, preferably in large art museums, libraries, or archives (required)
  • Organizational, communication, and team-work skills demonstrated through a history of project leadership, team leadership, and preventive conservation policy development (required)
  • Grant-writing and fundraising experience (required)
  • Development of testing methods and protocols for air quality and material degradation (preferred)
  • Testing and implementation of preventive conservation solutions such as glazing, protective coatings, cleaning methods, etc. (preferred)

Knowledge and Education:

  • Ph.D. in Chemistry
  • Significant experience in air quality testing, museum environment monitoring, material testing and analysis, light levels monitoring, development of analytical protocols, and development of policies for collections preservation.
  • Experience in recommending building and construction materials for best preservation practice
  • Experience in developing solutions for light damage protection, corrosion protection, etc.

 
Application Deadline: November 15, 2014
The Research Scientist is a full-time position and includes full benefits. Salary will be commensurate with experience. Send cover letter, indicating position of interest, resume, and salary history to:

Careers@MetMuseum.org

as a Word attachment only

with “Research Scientist” in the subject line.

Interventions Journal seeks submissions

intervention finalCall Extended – Submissions due October 24, 2014
Fall 2014 CALL FOR CONTENT Interventions Volume 4, Issue 1
Object Lesson: Conservation and Art History
Interventions is the online journal of Columbia University’s graduate program in Modern Art: Critical and Curatorial Studies. They are seeking content for our next issue, focusing on relationships between art conservation and art historical, curatorial, and artistic practices. Submissions can be in the form of artist projects or essays. Potential topics include (but are not limited to):

  •  Works that are open-ended, unfinished, in process, or require replenishment
  • o   Use of organic materials
  • o   Web-based works of art
  • Works that are no longer extant
  • o   Installations dismantled and/or dispersed into fragments
  • o   Performances, actions, and events
  • Works recycled or re-purposed into new works of art
  • Use of untested or volatile materials and processes
  • Exhibiting “relics,” ephemera, or documentation in lieu of works of art
  • Exhibiting copies, replicas, or facsimiles
  • Works of art that thematize physical/material change
  • Conservation of time-based media
  • o   Discontinued technologies needed to display or play back encoded media
  • Architectural preservation
  • Technical art history
  • Collaborations between conservators and artists
  • Collaborations between conservators and curators

They encourage submissions that approach this topic across artistic, critical, and curatorial frameworks. For this issue, they are specifically inviting submissions from conservators of modern and contemporary art and architecture. To submit content, please email an abstract of approximately 300 words, as well as a bio of no more than 100 words, to moda.interventions@gmail.com by Friday, October 24, 2014. Submissions will be reviewed and those whose proposals have been selected will be notified by October 31, 2014. Full texts must not exceed 4,000 words and should follow Chicago Style. Images should be 400 x 600 pixels, 72 dpi, and saved as a .jpg or .gif. Contributors are responsible for copyediting their texts prior to final submission and for attaining rights to all images provided for publication.
Interventions Journal is a curatorial platform featuring essays, interviews, web-based art projects, and experimental investigations of the implicit cross-sections between these practices. Flexible in format, the project aims to cultivate dialogue amongst a diverse body of participants including curators, artists, and art and architectural historians in order to establish a common space and archive of exchange.
Launched in 2011 within Columbia University’s graduate program in Modern Art: Critical & Curatorial Studies (MODA) by Ceren Erdem, Jaime Schwartz, and Lisa Hayes Williams, Interventions is currently edited by Béatrice Grenier, Anna Linehan, and Amber Moyles.

Job Posting: Art Conservation Faculty Position – The University of Texas at Dallas (Dallas, TX)

The University of Texas at Dallas

The School of Natural Sciences & Mathematics

The School of Arts & Humanities

Faculty Position in Art Conservation

Applications are solicited for an appointment to an endowed tenured professorship in the field of Conservation Science as part of the newly created Edith O’Donnell Institute for Art History and the Department of Chemistry. Preferred candidates will have degrees in chemistry or in closely related field and have a demonstrated interest in Conservation Science. Additionally, a scholarly record appropriate for a tenured professorship in leading American universities is required. Expectations include garnering external funding for graduate education and the ability to build strong collaborative interactions with other scientists and professionals both on campus and in the art museums in the greater Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex. Teaching responsibilities could include graduate and undergraduate courses in chemistry and Conservation Science. While designed as a senior level position, particularly accomplished individuals at all levels are invited to apply.

This position will also include Adjunct Staff status at the Dallas Museum of Art, ensuring close collaboration with the DMA’s Conservators and Curators, as well as direct access to the museum’s encyclopedic collection of over 22,000 works of art.

The Edith O’Donnell Institute is an independent administrative entity within The University of Texas at Dallas, with its Director reporting to the Office of the Provost with the title of Vice Provost. Faculty appointed to the O’Donnell Distinguished Chairs will hold tenure in the School of Natural Sciences and Mathematics with the possibility of joint appointment with the School of Arts and Humanities. The Institute has been founded with an endowment, complemented by committed university resources that will provide resources sufficient to recruit and support a nationally leading program in art history and art conservation.

The University of Texas at Dallas, located just north of Dallas in Richardson, Texas, now has an enrollment over 23,000 students. It has been designated by the State of Texas as one of seven emerging universities to be encouraged to become a major research campus. UTD maintains close ties with and major corporate entities in the Metroplex.

Review of applicants will begin immediately and continue until the positions are filled. Indication of gender and ethnicity for affirmative action statistical purposes is requested as part of the application.

Applicants should provide the following information: resume, statement of vision, and full contact information for four or more professional references via the ONLINE APPLICATION FORM available at: http://go.utdallas.edu/pnw141010.

CALL EXTENDED – Interventions, Object Lesson: Conservation and Art History

intervention final
 
 
Call Extended – Submissions due October 24, 2014
Fall 2014 CALL FOR CONTENT
Interventions Volume 4, Issue 1
Object Lesson: Conservation and Art History
Interventions is the online journal of Columbia University’s graduate program in Modern Art: Critical and Curatorial Studies. We are seeking content for our next issue, focusing on relationships between art conservation and art historical, curatorial, and artistic practices.
Submissions can be in the form of artist projects or essays. Potential topics include (but are not limited to):
• Works that are open-ended, unfinished, in process, or require replenishment
– Use of organic materials
– Web-based works of art
• Works that are no longer extant
– Installations dismantled and/or dispersed into fragments
– Performances, actions, and events
• Works recycled or re-purposed into new works of art
• Use of untested or volatile materials and processes
• Exhibiting “relics,” ephemera, or documentation in lieu of works of art
• Exhibiting copies, replicas, or facsimiles
• Works of art that thematize physical/material change
• Conservation of time-based media
– Discontinued technologies needed to display or play back encoded media
• Architectural preservation
• Technical art history
• Collaborations between conservators and artists
• Collaborations between conservators and curators
We encourage submissions that approach this topic across artistic, critical, and curatorial frameworks. For this issue, we specifically invite submissions from conservators of modern and contemporary art and architecture.
To submit content, please email an abstract of approximately 300 words, as well as a bio of no more than 100 words, to moda.interventions@gmail.com by Friday, October 24, 2014. Submissions will be reviewed and those whose proposals have been selected will be notified by October 31, 2014. Full texts must not exceed 4,000 words and should follow Chicago Style. Images should be 400 x 600 pixels, 72 dpi, and saved as a .jpg or .gif. Contributors are responsible for copyediting their texts prior to final submission and for attaining rights to all images provided for publication.
Interventions Journal is a curatorial platform featuring essays, interviews, web-based art projects, and experimental investigations of the implicit cross-sections between these practices. Flexible in format, the project aims to cultivate dialogue amongst a diverse body of participants including curators, artists, and art and architectural historians in order to establish a common space and archive of exchange.
Launched in 2011 within Columbia University’s graduate program in Modern Art: Critical & Curatorial Studies (MODA) by Ceren Erdem, Jaime Schwartz, and Lisa Hayes Williams, Interventions is currently edited by Béatrice Grenier, Anna Linehan, and Amber Moyles.

The Movie "Art and Craft": A Conservator's Perspective

Conservators have an uneasy relationship with forgery. Often knee-jerk reactions arise: outrage, indignation, feelings of being duped, and sometimes a closet admiration of a particular craft skill. While certainly valid, and generally true, they can be somewhat of a conversation stopper. Deep down, I find myself a bit envious that forgers get so much media attention, and that this attention is generally overwhelmingly sympathetic. Conservation is just as interesting, right?
Some examinations of philosophic aspects forgery within the field of conservation include AIC’s 2007 Annual Meeting, “Fakes, Forgeries and Fabrications” and tangential papers like conservation rock star Salvador Munoz Vinas’s 2011 “The Frankenstein Syndrome” in Ethics and Critical Thinking in Conservation. Once, I discovered a forged portion of a Gutenberg Bible I was working on, thankfully it belonged to an institutional client, rather than a private one.  Since we spend a lot of time looking at very small things, maybe it is difficult to change perspective, take the optivisor off, and look at this issue a bit more broadly.
The movie Art and Craft tells the story of Mark Landis, a contemporary forger. It is an entirely enjoyable film, the directors allow Landis to show and tell his story with little interference. The film clearly articulates his reasons and motivations for forgery while not becoming overly romantic. Landis, a diagnosed schizophrenic, is shown visiting his therapists and at home, generally watching tv and copying pictures from art books at the same time. He is quite likely more a victim of “the system” more than someone taking advantage of it. A couple of times he is shown engaging in quotidian activities; eating a dinner of melba toast dipped into a container of margarine, for example.

Mark Landis

Mark Landis. Source: <http://i.imgur.com/XzrQz4K.jpg>

Early on, the film reveals his primary motivation for creating forgeries: he wants to be a philanthropist. But he realizes quite quickly it is hard to be a philanthropist without money or art to give away; he had to create the art in order to distribute it. Also, he liked being treated like a philanthropist, and he admits becoming addicted to it. Who wouldn’t? So he keeps making more forgeries. The film delves into his personality, much of which seems to be strongly influenced by a tv that always seemed to be on. He is self-aware of these influences, and tells others of their source. For example, he started smoking because he saw characters in 1940’s movies smoking to calm down, so he thought it would help calm his nerves, and curb his compulsion to pace.

The film emphasizes the naturalness, almost an innocence, of his desire to copy works of art. The motivations behind many forgers (which are generally not pecuniary by the way) are often egotistically motivated: proving oneself equal to the great artists or “getting even” with the art experts by exposing their ignorance. In addition to his philanthropic desires, Landis also simply likes to copy things, again because it calms him down. Repetitive hand motions and using hand-eye coordination is comforting to him.  Sound familiar?

The antagonist in this film is a Matthew Leininger, a museum registrar, who originally noticed a number of identical paintings in numerous museums, and over the years slowly closed in on Landis. When seeing some of the paintings, the audience wonders how they could have fooled anyone.  Many are not of Eric Hebborn or Elmyr de Hory caliber, though Landis is certainly capable of finely crafted work. Many of his forgeries are a color photocopy of a work with acrylic medium smeared on the surface, to resemble brushstrokes. The materials he uses are all standard off the shelf art supplies from Michaels, and the frames from Home Depot, though he slightly antiques them. He often photocopies a certificate of sale from a major auction house or defunct gallery to aid in establishing provenance and adheres this to the back.

Mona Landis

The Mona Lisa, Mark Landis, 2014. On view at Think Coffee, NYC. Photo by Jeff Peachey.

In Think Coffee, a coffee shop near the Angelica Film Center in NYC where I saw the film, an original Mark Landis painting hangs. In this case, he has signed his own name, and the price tag is $25,000.  When I saw it, there was no red dot on the label. The painting is hanging in an ordinary wall space above a seat. I hesitate to call it a forgery, since it would be impossible, I think, for anyone to confuse this with the real thing. It looks like a color photocopy with acrylic medium and some painted additions, though the light is pretty low. Is it a forgery of a forgery? Or a copy of a copy? Or just a photocopy with some paint on it?

Landis is quite cavalier concerning his lack of interest in technical details. In an online reddit interview he dismissively leaves it to others. “And as far as artists that use brushstrokes, it’s something I never really gave much thought to. Experts supposedly can tell things like that, an expert is just someone who knows a great deal about something and sometimes he’s right.” And what does it say about our culture that many museum professionals don’t bother to look closely enough to tell a photocopy from a painting? Is it the result of looking at most things reproduced through a computer screen? To be fair, the film does show other examples of his work, drawing and paintings, that are very skillfully executed.

Typical of Landis, he spins a variety conflicting press reports about his work, even the copy of Mona Lisa on display. Was it was painted in 90 minutes as is generally reported or did it take an entire weekend? If sold, will the proceeds benefit the museum in his hometown, the Lauren Rogers Museum?  The museum’s marketing director denies this is true. Again, according to the reddit interview, the most one of his paintings has sold for is $800.

Here we enter an interesting terrain: Landis, who by copying so earnestly, and seemingly created by his media environment, may convolute some of the Benjaminian notions of the aura of authenticity and the copy.  He compulsively recreates copies of copies, over and over, quite likely unable to stop despite protests and essentially being caught. Landis himself admits he has not seen most of the works he copies, only reproductions. There seems to be no authentic work to be copied in his world. He becomes a Warholian performance artist, quite possibly the value of his work in is the transactions, and the changes in perception of the value of his work: genuine, forgery, doesn’t matter?

Landis does not confine himself to assume the persona of a wealthy philanthropist, there are references to at least three other characters he portrays.  In one hilarious scene (shown in the trailer below), he is dressed as a catholic priest, and shown blessing a unknowing recipient.

A question that comes up in the movie that is often asked of forgers—in fact, sometimes restorers and conservators— is why don’t you create your own work?  Landis is charasticly straightforward when he replies that he doesn’t have anything he wants to paint, he just likes copying others work. It is hard for the viewer to resent him. Indeed, he wants come clean, and earn a living based on his skills, as his website selling copies of photographs indicates. A charcoal or pencil drawing starts at $250, and a painting in acrylic or oil is $650.  There is an interesting caveat you must click:  “I certify that the photos provided are owned by me and do not represent an attempt to commit a forgery of copyrighted work.” Good idea, an invitation for more forgery, or a bit of bravado?

I left the movie feeling his forgeries were not only harmless, but in fact a positive thing: he really was making people happy by giving them gifts, and he seemed to get pleasure from it. What more could we ask from a transaction?  Leininger, the registrar, is presented as the killjoy. And even though Landis has tentatively agreed not to gift forgeries to institutions, the movie ends with him headed in a new direction, with similar ethical questions and even less accountability.

Forgers and magicians are experts at misdirection. Landis even compares himself to a magician at one point, when someone asked how he painted his Mona Lisa. “Well, it’s like a magic trick you know. If I told people, it wouldn’t be worth anything anymore.” Has Landis manipulating the director to miss the essential elements of his ethical, if not legal crimes? Could this entire film be considered a meta-forgery, where the viewer is the one duped? The thought even crossed my mind that he might produce obvious forgeries in order to continue producing more sophisticated ones.

Art and Craft provides an entertaining and engaging conversation starter for a number of issues surrounding forgery.

.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CeM4cFmXb3E

_________________

OTHER RESOURCES

Benjamin, Walter. “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction” in Illuminations, New York: Schocken Books, 2007. This extremely important essay comes up in virtually every discussion of forgery.

F is for Fake Movie. Dir. Orson Wells. 1974. A tangled web involving Elymr de Hory and Clifford Irving.

Hebborn, Eric. Confessions of a Master Forger: The Updated Autobiography. London: Cassell, 1997. Regardless how you feel about him, he is a skilled and entertaining writer with a fascinating history.

Hebborn, Eric.  The Art Forger’s Handbook. Woodstock, NY: The Overlook Press, 1997. This is a how-to book.

Irving, Clifford. Fake!: The Story of Elmyr de Hory the Greatest Art Forger of Our Time. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1969.  Irving’s interest in forgery became more than academic; he later faked an autobiography of Howard Hughes. Is forgery a contagious disease?

Meyers, Robin and Michael Harris, eds. Fakes & Frauds: Varieties of Deception in Print and Manuscript. New Castle, DE: Oak Knoll Press, 1996. A collection of essays dealing with forged books and documents.

Schwartz, Hillel. The Culture of the Copy: Striking Likenesses, Unreasonable Facsimiles. New York: Zone Books, 1996. A lengthy examination of twins, doppelgängers, self-portraits, seeing double, ditto, reenactment, replication and more in 565 pages.

Radnoti, Sandor.  Fake: Forgery and Its Place in Art, trans. Ervin Dunai. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 1999. An important philosophical take on forgery.

Any other favorites?

North Carolina Preservation Consortium Annual Conference

Significant Preservation: Inventories and Assessments for Strategic Planning
William and Ida Friday Center for Continuing Education
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
November 7, 2014
Inventories and assessments of heritage collections and sites are vital for meaningful strategic planning that conveys the importance of allocating scarce resources for preservation programs. Establishing the significance of tangible heritage to the communities we serve is essential for prioritizing conservation, storage, exhibition, and emergency planning decisions to protect cultural treasures for present and future generations. This conference will help you influence organizational, political, and community leaders who have the authority to improve preservation funding. Register today for a valuable learning experience with state, national, and international preservation leaders.
Keynote Speakers
Veronica Bullock is the Co-founder and Director of Significance International. She holds a bachelor’s degree in Prehistory/Archaeology from the Australian National University and a master’s degree in Applied Science (Materials Conservation) from the University of Western Sydney. Her fellowship at the International Center for the Study of the Preservation and Restoration of Cultural Property explored how significance assessments and risk assessments are taught in graduate conservation programs in Australia, Canada, the United States, and several countries in Europe. Ms. Bullock will provide an overview of the Significance Assessment methodology developed by the Collections Council of Australia.
Lisa Ackerman is the Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer of the World Monuments Fund and a Visiting Assistant Professor at the Pratt Institute. She holds a BA from Middlebury College, an MS in historic preservation from the Pratt Institute, and an MBA from New York University. Her professional service has included membership on the boards of the Historic House Trust of New York City, New York Preservation Archive Project, St. Ann Center for Restoration and the Arts, Partners for Sacred Places, Neighborhood Preservation Center, and the U.S. National Committee of the International Council on Monuments and Sites. Ms. Ackerman will present an introduction to the Arches heritage inventory and management system.
Dr. Paul R. Green is a Cultural Resources Specialist for the U.S. Air Force Civil Engineer Center, an Adjunct Associate Professor at Old Dominion University, and a modern Monuments Man. He holds a BS from Marshall University, MA from the University of Missouri-Columbia, and a PhD in Anthropology (Archaeology) from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Dr. Green is a member of the U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) Historical/Cultural Advisory Group and the International Military Cultural Resources Working Group. He will address the challenges and importance of prioritizing global heritage collections and sites for the protection of cultural property during war and armed conflicts.
Lightening Session Speakers
Martha Battle Jackson is Chief Curator for North Carolina Historic Sites. She will provide an overview of the Museum Assessment Program (MAP) for Collection Stewardship sponsored by the American Alliance of Museums.
Andrea Gabriel is Outreach & Development Coordinator for the North Carolina State Archives. She will present an introduction to the Traveling Archivist Program (TAP) administered by the North Carolina Office of Archives & History.
David Goist is a painting conservator in private practice. He will give an overview of the Conservation Assessment Program (CAP) sponsored by Heritage Preservation.
Schedule
8:00 Continental Breakfast
8:30 Registration
9:00 Welcome
9:15 Significance Assessments
10:10 Morning Break
10:30 Arches Heritage Inventory & Management System
11:25 Round Table Discussions
12:00 Lunch
1:00 MAP, TAP, & CAP
1:55 Afternoon Break
2:15 Protecting Cultural Property
3:10 Round Table Discussions
3:30 Final Q & A
4:00 Closing
Networking
The NCPC annual conference is an excellent opportunity to meet collections professionals from a wide range of disciplines and organizations. Take advantage of morning and afternoon refreshment breaks, our communal lunch, and round table discussions to meet new colleagues and visit with old friends. Share your valuable experience and learn from others.
Conference Audience
This conference is designed for professionals, staff, and volunteers working in museums, libraries, historic sites, archives, conservation centers, archaeological collections, and other preservation institutions; advocates for preservation on friends boards, advancement councils, and advisory committees; those working in organizations with a preservation mission; members of the preservation industry; and faculty and students in conservation, museum studies, public history, archaeology, archives, library science, and other preservation disciplines.
Registration
NCPC is committed to keeping registration fees extraordinarily affordable to encourage attendance. Early Bird fees for registrations received before October 1st is $50 for NCPC members and $75 for non-members. After October 1st registration is $60 for NCPC members and $85 for non-members. Registration on-site is $70 for NCPC members and $95 for nonmembers. Those who register on-site are not guaranteed lunch. The registration fee for graduate students is $40 for early bird, $50 after October 1st and $60 on-site. Please register via the NCPC web site.
Scholarships
We value the involvement of students, working professionals, and volunteers whose institutional support is insufficient to attend this conference. NCPC offers a limited number of conference scholarships. This scholarship covers full registration. It does not cover travel, lodging, or other expenses. The application process is simple and consists primarily of telling us why attendance is important for you. The scholarship is intended to promote continuing preservation education and professional networking. Applicants must be employed by or volunteer at a North Carolina institution with a preservation mission that has little or no funding for professional development or a graduate student enrolled in a preservation related discipline at a college or university in North Carolina. To apply, please complete the scholarship form on the NCPC web site by October 1st. Early registration fees will be honored for any applicants who are not granted a scholarship.
Location
The conference will be held at the William and Ida Friday Center for Continuing Education at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Parking at the Friday Center is free. See Map & Directions.
Air Travel
The Raleigh-Durham International Airport (RDU) combines southern hospitality with high-tech amenities, making it one of the friendliest airports in the country.
Hotels
Several hotels are located near the Friday Center. NCPC does not designate a conference hotel.
Cancellation and Refund Policy
Registration fees are nonrefundable, however substitutions are permitted. In the unlikely event that the conference is canceled (due to adverse weather or other causes beyond our control) registrants will be notified and fees promptly refunded. NCPC accepts no responsibility in such cases beyond the refund of conference registration fees.
About the North Carolina Preservation Consortium
The North Carolina Preservation Consortium (NCPC) is a nonprofit organization dedicated to promoting the preservation of collections in libraries, museums, archives, and historic sites; monuments, memorials, and outdoor art; archaeological sites and collections; historic and cultural architecture; and private collections of family treasures. Learn more about NCPC at www.ncpreservation.org
Connect with NCPC
You can use social media to follow NCPC on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn.
NCPC News
Would you like to receive the NCPC electronic newsletter and email announcements about NCPC programs and projects? NCPC News is free and open to all. Subscribe today.
NCPC Membership
The success of our statewide preservation program depends on the talents, diversity, and generosity of our colleagues. We are honored to welcome institution and individuals as members to the consortium. Our minimum annual institutional membership fee is only $100. Higher levels of support are greatly appreciated. Individual memberships are $25 for working professionals and $10 graduate students. Benefits of NCPC membership include discounts on our continuing education workshops and the annual conference, eligibility for grants and scholarships, networking and leadership opportunities, and recognition for supporting preservation in North Carolina. Together we can make a difference in the survival of our tangible and intangible heritage. Become a member by submitting your application today.
Friends of NCPC
Generous financial support from members, corporate sponsors, and the general public enhance NCPC services and programs. Donations may be given in honor or memory of someone special to you; an inspiring person, teacher, mentor, colleague, friend, or loved one. Your financial support will help NCPC preserve heritage collections and sites for present and future generations. Join the Friends of NCPC today or contact the NCPC Executive Director to discuss giving and fundraising opportunities.
For additional information about this conference contact:
Robert James
Executive Director
North Carolina Preservation Consortium (NCPC)
www.ncpreservation.org
PO Box 2651
Durham, NC 27715-2651
Phone 919-412-2238
Email: robertjamesncpc@gmail.com

Job Posting: Director of Conservation Relations (Michigan)

Director, Conservation Relations

RHH201423
The Company
An integral part of the restoration industry since 1993, our client has established an enviable track record for immediate action and outstanding results.  Their restoration capabilities are vast and their specialties are many; from residential & commercial electronics, data recovery, complete factory rebuilds as well as art restoration.  With steady and calculated growth, they have evolved into a world-class operation recognized as a national leader in recovery and restoration technology.  Their national headquarters is located in a 140,000 sq. ft. state-of-the-art facility in Southeastern Michigan; they also have recovery facilities in several states east of the Mississippi.  They currently employ 150+ people nationwide and are experiencing continued growth and geographic expansion.
 
The Challenge
 
As a senior manager within the organization, the Director of Conservation Relations will oversee the operation of the art restoration department.  The Director of Conservation Relations is responsible for participating in institutional planning and setting and maintaining effective policies with respect to the care and treatment of art. The Director of Conservation Relations will lead the development of special initiatives within the art department, and will represent the organization to a broad range of external constituencies, including most notably; museums, art galleries and other professionals within the conservation profession. The Director of Conservation Relations will need to be a professional who is distinguished within the Art and Gallery communities, will have a substantial knowledge of conservation, and will be responsible for the administrative aspects and implementation of conservation activities in accordance with an ethical code such as the AIC Code of Ethics and Guidelines for Practice.
 

  • Flawless Execution
  • Customer Focused/Driven

 

  • Substantial Knowledge of Art Conservation
  • Strong Strategic Thinking

 

  • Results Driven/Action Oriented
  • High Energy

 
 

 
Job Definition/Characteristics
 

  • Experience within the mitigation of deterioration and damage to cultural property through the formulation and implementation of policies and procedures for the following: Appropriate environmental conditions. Handling and maintenance procedures for storage, packing, transport, and use.
  • Develop and monitor the implementation of annual and multi-year work plans in accordance with the organization’s strategic plan. Develop and manage operating, project and program budgets.
  • The Director of Conservation Relations will create and manage the budget for the art restoration business unit.
  • Will ensure that business line plans are aligned with the company-wide strategic plan.
  • Ensure the physical art studio is managed in a manner that provides for the safety and proper care of art along with the safety of other employees.
  • Manage art restoration staff; including providing opportunity for training, education and continued growth.
  • Review and approve proposed treatments to ensure that they will be effective in successfully restoring the damaged art.
  • Direct and monitor conservation treatments on objects in the company’s possession.
  • Plan and coordinate, as needed, the scientific analysis of works of art in the company’s possession.
  • Travel to meet with potential clients such as museums and galleries.
  • Plan and monitor the preparation of documentation related to the analysis and treatment of works of art in the company’s possession.
  • Participate in the analysis and evaluation of art that has been damaged.
  • Develop and monitor the adherence to protocols for the handling, movement, storage, and utilization of materials and equipment in a manner that will protect the health and ensure of the safety of the art restoration department staff.
  • Develop and enforce proper restoration protocol that adheres to the professional guidelines of restoration.
  • The Director of Conservation Relations will serve as the key representative to the conservation profession.
  • The Director of Conservation Relations will serve as the external representative to those in art related fields, including but not limited to, galleries, museums, conservators and private clients.
  • Educate insurance professionals on the process and importance of proper art restoration.
  • Uphold professional standards and guidelines of practice of the field while always acting in a manner that is consistent with the best interest of the company and will protect and enhance its reputation and standing within the community of galleries and museums. Uphold professional standards of the field and act in a manner that is consistent with the best interest of the client. Will protect and enhance the company’s reputation and standing within the restoration and art communities.

 
The Requirements
 

  • Bachelor’s Degree in Fine Arts, Art History, Archaeology or Cultural Anthropology.
  • A Master’s Degree in Art Conservation, Art History or Archaeology is preferred.
  • Working knowledge in chemistry / art materials as it relates to art restoration.
  • Proven ability to manage a fast paced and entrepreneurial environment.
  • Very detail oriented with strong leadership and project management skills.
  • Demonstrated analytical, written communication and organizational skills.
  • Proven creative problem solving skills with a drive to create “solutions”.
  • Strongly demonstrated leadership and communication skills involving employees, customers, peers and suppliers.
  • Highly focused, organized, analytical thinker who initiates as opposed to reacts.
  • Demonstrated degree of passion and energy with laser focus on execution and results.
  • Proven “take-charge” record of accomplishment.
  • An open, honest and respectful communication style tailored to the audience.  Must be comfortable speaking in public, in formal and informal settings.
  • Displays stamina, energy and is committed to personal growth and development for self and others.

 
 
 
If you know of anyone who has these qualifications
and is looking for a challenging career, please contact us:

Eric Hohauser

Consultant

Ashley Picklo

Candidate Developer

Todd Hohauser

Consultant

Harvey Hohauser, PhD

Consultant

William Weatherston

Consultant

All Inquiries Should Be Sent Via Email

Email: Information@Hohauser.com

Job Posting: Summer Internships – National Gallery of Art (Washington, DC)

Conservation: Frames
The intern will learn about the history, techniques, and craftsmanship of museum-quality fine art framing, as well as the complexities of how frames are chosen by curators, designers, and conservators. He or she will assist frame conservators in making molding and constructing and finishing frames for canvas and panel paintings. Duties may also involve other frame-related work, including computer imaging, sample making, creating wooden sculpture bases, database maintenance, and photographic documentation, as well as organizing workshop and antique frame storage. Basic creative design, woodworking, painting, and color-mixing skills are required.
Conservation: Objects
The intern will assist with the yearly summer maintenance and treatment of the outdoor sculpture collection in the Sculpture Garden and surrounding the East and West Buildings. He or she will work with a team of conservators to clean and protect these large-scale sculptures. The intern will also help maintain the department’s object condition database, including uploading information from the paper files and completing condition examinations on sculpture and medals. As possible, the intern may assist conservators with their research or with other projects including x-radiography and technical study. Current graduate students and 2015 graduates in conservation are invited to apply. Graduate students in museum studies and collection management programs may be considered as well.
Conservation: Paper
The intern will assist paper conservators in organizing and cataloging items in the Paper Sample Collection of historic and contemporary artists’ drawing and printing papers. Other responsibilities will include recording watermarks photographically and researching papermaking companies. Current graduate students and 2015 graduates in conservation, studio art, or archival studies are encouraged to apply. Knowledge of paper and papermaking is essential.
For more information about our summer internship program, including application guidelines and forms, please direct faculty and students to our Web site, http://www.nga.gov/content/ngaweb/opportunities/interns-and-fellows/graduate/summer.html.html. If you have further questions, please do not hesitate to contact us.